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Buckshot Soup
"good time, foot stomping acoustic country played with a passion."
Now here's a story...Me and Duke started messing around with some tunes after splitting with our previous band. Now Duke used to play the drums by trade, but as I couldn't sing, he picked up a guitar and strummed a few chords together (happens them was G, C, & D). As luck would have it, I had just gone out and bought myself a double bass more as a talking point than serious instrument, as I'm a punk kid at heart. Anyway them chords seemed good ones for country, so thats what we started playing.Now, as all good people know - when you arent playing music, you head to the local drinking place and it was there that we met up with Ray. Now Ray knew his country stuff even the curve balls like Wayne "the Train" Hancock and Stacey Earle (no, not Steve) and Ray said he played the banjo too. Duke and me were a bit dubious at first. We didnt know if it was the drink talking, or us drunk listening, but one things for sure, we haven't ever heard of a banjo player so young, and definitely not a GOOD young banjo player. It seemed like the best idea would be to get together and knock a few tunes (and a few more drinks) down.So Buckshot Soup was born. A trio to begin with, we played around town at the local open mike and jam nights to try out our new sounds. As I'm sure you're aware, Derby is not exactly a hot-bed of country talent, but we seem to have shone through the acoustic scene and attracted a fair bit of attention.It was due to one of these here jam nights that Jim happened upon the band. Just back from a tour of Australia, he slid into a venue just as we were hitting the stage. He quickly introduced himself as a dobro player. Now, technically, we were kinda looking for a lap steel player at the time, but beggars can't be choosers right? So Jim joined us on stage for three songs, and within a week was playing his first full gig as part of the band.Unfortunately we seem to have lost Ray at some gig or other in 2005, very careless, I know! We think it may have been at an Old Crow Medicine Show gig, but its all a little hazy.We carried on playing as a trio a numerous venues round the Midlands, heading out to bring our sounds to the masses (or those that'll listen). We've been hitting the audience hard with both our original material and some cover tunes that we do in our own Soup style. Each song carefully forced through the Soup grinder to make up what now amounts to over 2 hours of material.To our surprise Ritchie appeared at a gig around Easter 2006. He'd previously played some guitars with Duke years and years before. Now here he was again, boldly standing in front of us and stating hed bought a banjo and wanted to join the band. We had five gigs in three days coming up, so we told him to get a change of underwear and get in the van. Two onstage rehearsals later, he was plugged in and playing a thirty-four song show.Making life easy has never been the Buckshot Soup way, so just after recording our five song EP (Pure White Sugar) Jim left the band, and so back to a trio again it was!So the Soup of today is...Duke "Whiskey" Williams - Vocals, Guitar, Mandolin, and Harmonica.Ritchie "On-The-Barrel" Head - Banjo, Guitar, Dobro.Chuck Walzner - Upright Bass.So there we have it, in our own humble opinion, Buckshot Soup, the best three-piece country band round these here parts.Well be seeing y'all real soon,Chuck Walzner

best industry quotes

  1. "These boys are definitely worth tracking down and seeing. Hell, even if y'all don't like bluegrass, go see 'em - they could just make you change your mind." - www.surgemusic.com
  2. "Even if you think country music is cheesy, you would surely get down to this mix of funky, double bass ho-down blues and melodic country rock" - www.saggy-pants.com
  3. Worth getting a baby sitter for! - myspace comment

best headline shows

  1. 3 monthly residency at Ryan's, Derby
  2. 3 monthly residency at the Maverick Drinking House, Stourbridge
  3. 3 monthly residency with Hub Gigs, London

best support shows

  1. Toy Hearts - http://www.myspace.com/thetoyhearts
  2. More Storeys Four - http://www.myspace.com/morestoryfours06
  3. Dust Collectors - http://www.myspace.com/dustcollectors

links

  1. official site - www.buckshotsoup.co.uk
  2. myspace - buckshotsoup

reviews

Live at the Maverick Drinking House - 1st Oct
1st Oct - The Maverick I've got to confess right up front that I'd never heard of Buckshot Soup, but when my good mate Al tells me a band are worth a look and I should check 'em out, he's usually right. Buckshot Soup are pretty unusual for a bluegrass band on three counts. First, they're from Derbyshire not Tennessee, secondly they're young and thirdly, given the first two, they're the real thing. Stand-up double bass playing Chuck, Smilin' Jim with his Dobro lap steel all fronted by Duke's six string guitar and attitude vocals they launch into 'Texas Eagle', the opening song from the Steve Earle and Del McCoury Band album 'The Mountain', one of my favourite albums by two of my favourite artists. This was an immediate opportunity for these boys to be monumentally disappointing, but not a bit of it. It took about 10 seconds and two lines of this first song for me to realise I'm in for a treat tonight, as real justice was being done to a piece that would seriously challenge many another band. Producing an entirely genuine sound, they move confidently and fluidly between classics from Steve Earle, Johnny Cash, Gram Parsons and more together with a selection of their own material thrown in for good measure. Chuck spins his double bass around like a seasoned vet, which he must be judging from the level of wear on his fingerboard while Duke lays down solid chop rhythms, sometimes guitar, sometimes mandolin, lacing the occasional number with tasty harmonica licks. Dukes voice swings from gravelly in-your-face through high and lonesome to suit the song and Jim just sits there smilin' churning out riff after beautiful riff of slide, supplemented with nifty finger picking and harmony vocals. You've probably already guessed I loved every minute, right down to the Hayseed Dixie style 'Fat Bottomed Girls' that rounded off set two. I wasn't the only one; the audience were in no mood to let them go now and called for encore after encore which saw them finally wind up with a beautiful rendition of 'Tecumsah Valley', finishing as they started - with a little Steve Earle. If you like your bluegrass, these boys are definitely worth tracking down and seeing. Hell, even if y'all don't like bluegrass, go see 'em - they could just make you change your mind.
03/12/05 @ Inn The Bank from www.saggy-pants.com
Using some very catchy and funky double bass and mixing it with a country style acoustic and some smooth slide guitars, Buckshot Soup have a very catchy blues grass country feel to them. With the vocals being very clear and melodic yet keeping a powerful growl it has plenty of feeling and their style is certainly upbeat and uplifting. This band are very tight and also have a style that is very different from any other bands we have seen around and even if you think country music is cheesy, you would surely get down to this mix of funky, double bass ho-down blues and melodic country rock. With some excellent covers done in their own style (including Queen's Fat Bottom Girls) this band provided a lively and upbeat start to the evening.
03/12/05 @ Inn The Bank from www.saggy-pants.com
Using some very catchy and funky double bass and mixing it with a country style acoustic and some smooth slide guitars, Buckshot Soup have a very catchy blues grass country feel to them. With the vocals being very clear and melodic yet keeping a powerful growl it has plenty of feeling and their style is certainly upbeat and uplifting. This band are very tight and also have a style that is very different from any other bands we have seen around and even if you think country music is cheesy, you would surely get down to this mix of funky, double bass ho-down blues and melodic country rock. With some excellent covers done in their own style (including Queen's Fat Bottom Girls) this band provided a lively and upbeat start to the evening.

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